I can remember my mother bringing the laundry in from the clothesline and filling up a long-necked green bottle with a top that looked a little like the pour spout of the sprinkling can she used on her flowers. She carefully sprinkled water over the clothes she had already spent several hours washing and drying, turning them over to get both sides, and then stuffed them in a large zippered plastic bag. Not a Ziploc, but something the size of a kitchen garbage sack with a real clothing zipper on it. Then she put the bag in the refrigerator. A few days later, she opened her ironing board, preheated her electric iron and spent several more hours ironing those clothes. Every week. Me? I spend a couple hours every 2 months and that only because my boys and my husband love cotton shirts. Lucky for me they only had a few of them, and now I am down to just a husband.

I looked up the invention of permanent press fabric and must have found half a dozen dates. Chemical companies, fabric companies, and clothing manufacturers all seem to claim a share of the glory all the way back to the 1930s. Then in 1956 there was a patent that simply claims to be the invention of permanent press. The problem was the way it was produced. The resin on the cloth made the cloth stiff, uncomfortable to wear, and easily split when it was sewn. Koret of California finally received a patent on March 14, 1961, for an improved method of manufacturing press-free crease-retained garments made with smooth, comfortable fabric that held up. I barely remember the first time my mother bought my father a permanent press dress shirt so that date is just about right. And all that brought something to mind.

Maybe this is one of those urban legends that everyone has heard from someone. I am really not certain, but Keith’s mother once told us about a young woman who began attending services with them back in the 1950s with her three young children, the oldest about 6. She arrived just on time and left quickly. But unlike many of those types, she was always there, her children knew the basic Bible stories, and she herself was attentive to both class and sermon. In fact her keeping to herself seemed to be more a product of embarrassment than anything else.

My mother-in-law, astute observer that she was, had noticed something. The children were always neat, clean, and combed except for one thing—their clothes were always wrinkled. This was back before the day of permanent press and polyester. There is nothing quite as wrinkled as old-fashioned cotton—except maybe wrinkled linen—which was way beyond this woman’s means.

I forget now how she managed to ask. Maybe it was the offer of an iron, which I know she was generous enough to do. Knowing my mother-in-law though, she probably just came out and asked. However she did it, she got an answer.

The woman’s husband was not a Christian. He not only refused to attend services with her, he refused to get up and help her get the children ready. So every week after their Saturday evening bath, she dressed them for church and then put them to bed. The next morning it was easier to get the three tykes up and fed and herself dressed for church.

After all these years, I’ve heard nearly every excuse in the world for missing Bible classes or the morning services altogether. This young woman could have easily pulled two or three off the list and used them. So why didn’t she? I can think of three good reasons.

First, she loved the Lord. Nothing and no one was going to come between her and her Savior. She knew the perils of allowing excuses to keep her away from the spiritual nutrition her soul needed, and she was not so arrogant as to think she could feed herself with no help at all. “I can have a relationship with God without the church,” I have heard more times than I can count. She knew better.

And because she had her first priority correct, the others fell right in line. She loved her children, but more than that she loved her children’s souls. She had to combat not only the usual onslaught of the world, but the huge impact of a father’s bad example. She was still in her early 20s so she had probably married quite young, too young to really understand the challenges of this “mixed” marriage, maybe even so naïve that she thought “love would conquer all” and he would change easily. Now she knew better, but she was more than ever determined to save her children.

And despite it all, she loved her husband and his soul too. She knew that any little chink in her armor would allow him the rationale he needed to remain apathetic to her faith. She understood Peter’s command in 1 Pet 3:1,2, Likewise, wives, be subject to your own husbands, so that even if some do not obey the word, they may be won without a word by the conduct of their wives, when they see your respectful and pure conduct. The more he resisted, the stronger she needed to be, and if taking her children to church in wrinkled clothes did the trick, then that’s what she would do.

This young woman shows us all that excuses can be overcome by pure will. Certainly we are not talking about the truly old, ill, and otherwise unable to go out either regularly or on occasion when there is truly a “bad day.” We are talking about people who allow a little, or even a lot of trouble to become too much trouble to serve God. I know many who work around the hurdles and snags that Satan throws in our paths. It costs them time, money, and a whole lot of extra energy, but they have their priorities straight. They know who comes first, and they understand that our modern “sacrifices” are an insult to the word.

If finding excuses comes easily for me, maybe I need to consider throwing out my permanent press and wearing some wrinkled clothes.

And when one of them that sat at meat with him heard these things, he said unto him, Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom of God. But he said unto him, A certain man made a great supper; and he bade many: and he sent forth his servant at supper time to say to them that were bidden, Come; for all things are now ready. And they all with one consent began to make excuse…And the servant came, and told his lord these things. Then the master of the house being angry said to his servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor and maimed and blind and lame. And the servant said, Lord, what thou didst command is done, and yet there is room. And the lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, and constrain them to come in, that my house may be filled. For I say unto you, that none of those men that were bidden shall taste of my supper. Luke 14:15-24.

Things change so rapidly these days it seems impossible to keep up. I had carefully collected a library of classical music LPs for my students to listen to. By the time my studio was large enough, with students advanced enough to get much use out of them, I was collecting cassettes. Before long I had to switch to CDs. At least I don’t have a collection of 8 tracks collecting dust as well. Somehow I missed that phase. The same thing is happening in the church, and I don’t mean changing doctrine to suit the situation, I mean changing the means by which we teach that unchangeable Word, and the ways we edify one another while still clinging to the constraints of obedient faith. Gone are the charts drawn on white bed sheets and the overhead projectors flashing carefully covered up lists, revealed one line at a time when the speaker moves the sheet of paper he laid on top. Now we use power point and remotes. Even at the age of three my grandson Silas knew to pick up something rectangular and point it at his make-believe screen when he pretended to preach like Daddy. We must beg people to use the carefully selected library of books we have in the back hall—they are happier with the internet and Bible study programs, not to mention Kindle and Nook. Even the riffling of Bibles during the sermon has decreased—many now have all 66 books on something the size of a wallet. You are more likely to hear beeps or electronic “plops” than the quiet shuffling of pages. Now the preacher doesn’t just have to raise his voice when an infant begins to cry; he has to raise it when someone forgets to turn off his cell phone. Now the song leader must wrestle with an audience who not only wants to sing at their own pace regardless of his direction, but with the ones who cannot for the life of them understand or “feel” syncopation. Fanny Crosby would never have set words to a syncopated tune. But some things will always be the same. Children whose parents tell them to “Listen!” will still come up with ways to keep their wandering minds on the sermons, counting how many times the preacher says certain words or writing down every passage he uses, and in that play will begin to memorize scriptures that stay with them for a lifetime. Someone will still sniffle a bit during the Lord’s Supper, and someone else will momentarily hold up the collection while he tries to persuade his two year old to put the coins in the plate, and the children will learn what is done and why. A deacon will stand in back and count while another one makes last minute notes for the closing announcements, those precious words that help us “weep with those who weep, and rejoice with those who rejoice.” Serious men, in khakis and open neck shirts instead of suits and ties, will still listen carefully to the preacher while their wives juggle their own listening with trying to decide if a requested potty trip is really necessary or just a ploy to get out of this boring seat for a few minutes. People will still ask for prayers when life deals them a harsh blow, and brothers and sisters will gather round with hugs and tears, and offers of help. Excited new converts will still sit closer to the front than old ones, listening with rapt attention, diligently taking notes to study at home, and thinking up questions that will keep the elders busy for weeks. Young parents will be suddenly motivated to attend regularly for the first time in their lives by the responsibility of the small souls God has placed in their hands. Widows will contentedly sit, patiently waiting for the time when they can meet their mates “at the gate,” as my mother asked my daddy to do just moments before his passing. Older couples will do as I do, looking around at all the new but still seeing the old in spite of the new, comforting themselves that God’s way still works, even in this perplexing age of technology and unparalleled advancement. As long as there are people to hear it and hearts to believe it, planting the seed will make Christians spring up out of any plot of good soil. It has worked for nearly two thousand years now and we, in spite of the wow-factor of our inventions, will never outdo the results God can get with one Book. If you ever forget that, then look around some Sunday morning, not for the differences, but for the things that never change, and that never will as long as faith exists on the earth.

"O my God," I say, "take me not away in the midst of my days-- you whose years endure throughout all generations!" Of old you laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the work of your hands. They will perish, but you will remain; they will all wear out like a garment. You will change them like a robe, and they will pass away, but you are the same, and your years have no end. The children of your servants shall dwell secure; their offspring shall be established before you. Psalms 102:24-28

Marion Morrison was born on May 26, 1907. While a student at the University of Southern California, he did odd jobs on a movie lot. A film producer saw him and became friendly with him, finally offering him the lead in a western called "The Big Trail" in 1930. The movie was a flop, but the young man managed to support his family for the next nine years with Grade C westerns, 52 of them, in fact. Then in 1939, that same producer gave him the role of the Ringo Kid in another western called "Stagecoach." That movie, which premiered on March 2, 1939, was a hit, and the movie star John Wayne became an "overnight" success. He and his producer friend, John Ford, created the quintessential American—strong, quiet, and independent.

We are proud to be known for “the American Spirit of Independence.” That independent spirit is what made those original settlers leave everything behind and cross the ocean for a new start. It’s what made them rebel against England and start their own country. It’s what made them push westward across the whole continent. It helped capitalism defeat communism and made our armed forces invincible. It’s how we got to the moon before the Soviets. It’s the reason John Wayne is still an icon in American cinema—he played that independent American at least one hundred times and made us love it.

That spirit is also the reason we have a difficult time turning our lives over to God. It’s the reason our faith suffers when we can’t fix things ourselves. It’s the reason we despair when times are difficult, instead of exulting in the grace of God. But He said, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that power of Christ may rest upon me,2 Cor 12:9. Weakness? We want nothing to do with it!

We must overcome the American spirit of independence if we ever hope to endure the trials of life. Everything we have, everything we boast about, can be lost in an instant. When that is all we have to live for and all we count on to make us feel worthwhile in this life, we really aren’t worth very much at all. Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in Heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroy, where thieves do not break in and steal, Matt 6:19-20. People who count on only themselves are the ones who jumped off bridges during the Great Depression. They relied on their own strength, ingenuity, and accomplishments, but something came along and showed them how frail those things really were.

We must overcome the American spirit of independence if we ever hope to achieve eternal life. We cannot save ourselves. There is nothing we can do that will ever make us worthy of salvation. We must give it all, and still we are not worthy. We must recognize our own helplessness and surrender it all to the only one who can possibly save us. We surrender our will to his law. We surrender our lives to his plan. We surrender our “American spirit of independence” and, instead, trust and rely only on Him. Relinquishing that control is more than some people can bear.

Perhaps the trick is to turn that spirit of independence into another source of strength. Am I strong enough to hand over the reins and trust someone else with my life and my soul? Am I strong enough to risk it all for the greatest pay-off there could be? Or am I weakling who can do nothing unless I can see the end right in front of my eyes?

If I cannot do that, I am really not very strong at all. And I have lost one of the greatest sources of strength there is: hope. For in hope were we saved; but hope that is seen is not hope; for who hopes for that which he sees? But if we hope for that which we see not, then we with patience wait for it, Rom 8:24,25.

God expects His children to depend on Him and only Him. He expects their absolute trust in his good will toward them, and their willingness to accept His decisions, even when they don’t understand them. Our “spirit of independence” may have made us a strong country, but if we do not learn to overcome that cultural mindset and control it, we will never be anything but the weakest of Christians.

I will declare your righteousness and your deeds, but they will not profit you. When you cry out, let your collection of idols [the things you rely on]deliver you! The wind will carry them off, a breath will take them away. But he who takes refuge in me shall possess the land, and shall inherit my holy mountain, Isa 57:12,13.

What if I said to you, “He is as slow as a turtle,” and then a few minutes later added, “He’s moving at a snail’s pace.” What would you say? I’ll tell you what you would not say.

You would not say, “Oh, he must have hard skin,” or, “He must be slimy.” You would not look at me in exasperation and say, “Well which one is he?! A snail or a turtle?” Why is it then, that we do that to the Bible when the Holy Spirit uses figurative language?

Usually there is only one point to a figure, whether it is as small as a metaphor or as complex as a parable. God can call the church a family, an army, a vineyard, a kingdom, and a bride. There is a point of emphasis for each figure. Most of us get that one, but then do crazy things with the parables, finding and binding points where there are none, or tying ourselves into knots trying to explain why both Jesus and the apostles’ teaching are called “the foundation.” Bible study wouldn’t be nearly as difficult if we used the same common sense with it that we do with everyday language. That’s why the Holy Spirit used common language—so we could understand

Eph 6:16 says faith is a shield. 1 Thes 5:8 says faith is a breastplate. Couldn’t Paul get it right? Yes he could, and yes he did. Faith is either one depending upon the point you are trying to make.

The word for shield is used only that one time in the New Testament that I could find. In its etymology, it originally referred to the stone that covered the door of a cave. That immediately brings to mind the stones that covered both Jesus’ and Lazarus’s tomb-caves. The door had to be heavy so a scavenging animal could not dislodge it. It had to completely cover the opening so that after four days, as Martha reminded Jesus, the smell wouldn’t get out.

The word was later used for a specific type of shield—a large rectangular shield that would completely cover the soldier just like that rock covered the cave door. What did Paul say about the purpose of that shield? “To quench all the fiery darts of the evil one.” Did you get that? It covers so well and is so heavy that none of those darts can get past it. So whose fault is it when they do? It’s ours because we stuck something out where it didn’t belong, or completely dropped the shield.

Now what about that breastplate in 1 Thes 5:8? That word is thorax which is now our English word for “chest.” No, it doesn’t cover the whole soldier like the shield, but it does cover all his vital organs, and it does another thing as well. A thorax was a piece of armor with two parts, covering both the front and the back. Faith is like that. It will help you with the attacks you see coming—and sometimes you can see your problems rushing in head-on—but it will also protect you from surprise attacks from the rear. Sometimes life deals you an unexpected blow—“didn’t see that one coming,” we often say--but your faith can protect you from even those sorts of things.

So is faith a shield or a breastplate? Faith is both, depending upon the point you are trying to make. The thing the two metaphors have in common is protection. God has given us what we need to stay safe. Don’t get so busy trying to explain things that shouldn’t need explaining that you forget to use it.

Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil. For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places. Therefore take up the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand firm.Ephesians 6:11-13

I was driving back from Bible class, coming down the last hill before the river, rolling green fields dotted with black cattle on the right, and a couple of old trailer houses perched on the left, their yards littered with rusty old farm equipment, screens hanging loose on porches covered with peeling paint, and black and brown frosted-off weeds standing knee high. It may surprise you that I was driving. I have reached that point where the doctor is the one who decides if I can have a driver’s license, and it seems the general consensus is that it doesn’t matter if you can tell if that thing by the side of the road is a garbage can, a mailbox, or a midget, as long you know it’s there and don’t hit it.

But I was really tired. Most of my medications are beta blockers of one sort or another, or poisons that affect my heartbeat. Sometimes I am lucky to have a pulse rate of 52 and blood pressure just scraping the bottom side of 100, the top number that is. The bottom one might be half that.

I had just bought groceries for the week, picked up a prescription and some dry cleaning, stood in line at the post office for twenty minutes and taught a Bible class, not to mention driving the hour and a half round trip back and forth to town. I was ready to sit out the rest of the day, after I got home and unloaded.

But my weary mind forgot that I was driving and told me to lean back and relax. I know my eyes weren’t closed longer than half a second, but when my brain caught up with what I was doing and I snapped to, my pulse was racing along just fine. Good thing I was only five miles from home.

And that’s when I forgot that these medications are a blessing, that without them I wouldn’t see at all, and wouldn’t have for several years now. That’s when I railed against a gift of God. It’s not enough that I have no energy. I must also put up with the discomfort of follicular conjunctivitis every minute of every day as a side effect, and nearly constant headaches from the blurry vision that accompanies it. How can this be a blessing?

Down days happen, usually when things pile up. Once again we needed something we couldn’t afford. Once again we had received bad news about a parent’s health. Once again something broke down. My vision had decreased another line at my last checkup. Keith’s RA had broken through the latest, the third, layer of medication and we weren’t sure it could be knocked down without another layer. And now I come dangerously close to an accident that could have hurt not just me but an innocent bystander.

So down I spiraled. When even blessings—like the medications that keep you seeing—become something you want to curse because all you can focus on are the side effects, you are too far down, and it’s time to find your way out.

Down days aren’t so much about a lack of faith as they are about a moment’s forgetfulness. They are about looking for the wrong things, or looking at the right things the wrong way. This wretched medicine makes me feel horrible, I sometimes think on a down day. On an up day I remember, this wonderful medicine has kept me seeing long enough to see my grandchildren.

I don’t for a minute compare myself to John, and I certainly have no idea what his feelings were, but if I had been in his shoes—or in his cell—I might have needed a reminder too. He had given up so much to fulfill his role in God’s plan as the forerunner of the Messiah. Yet now, when he has done all that was expected of him, he is cast into prison for speaking the truth. Surely God would save this righteous man, the one of whom the Messiah himself would say, “Of those born of women, none is greater than John,” Luke 7:28. But no, day after day he languishes in a prison cell at the mercy of a wicked woman and her weak husband.

I would have had a down day or two as I came to realize that my work was finished, that perhaps I, too, was finished, at the completely un-ripe young age of 31 or so. I don’t know if that is why or not, but he sent his disciples to ask Jesus, “Are you the one, or should we look for another?” (7:20)

The Lord sent him what he needed to hear. "Go and tell John what you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good news preached to them. And blessed is the one who is not offended by me." Luke 7:22-23.

John already knew those things; he had probably seen many of them. He just needed to be reminded, and there is no shame in that.

God can remind each one of us too. He does it by the providential words and actions of your brethren. He does it when a hymn suddenly wafts through your mind. He does it by giving us His Word, a resource of constant refreshment when we need it. How many of us don’t have verses we go to in difficult moments? If you don’t, then you need to make some time today to find one. Find it before you need it. Find it, and let the Lord remind you about all of your blessings, both now and to come.

You can come up from a down day, but only if you reach out and take hold of the help that is offered.

They who wait for the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint. Isaiah 40:31.

We’ve been studying faith lately in our weekly women’s class. Part of that study involved looking up every passage we could find that contained the word, then categorizing the verses into some sort of sensible outline. One of the categories we called “acts” of faith, all the verbs associated with the word.

That also had me looking up the original Greek word. I have said before and constantly remind the class that I am not a Greek scholar. I have enough trouble with English. Yet looking at a Greek word can instantly bring another English word to mind and give you some insight into the word. Here are some of the things we found.

2 Cor 5:7 says “we walk by faith not by sight.” That word is peripateo and you should instantly think of the word “peripatetic.” Someone who is peripatetic is a pacer, constantly moving back and forth, usually talking at the same time. Think ADD and you have the picture. We aren’t to be just strolling on this faithful walk of ours.

Gal 5:6 mentions “faith working through love.” The word for “working” is energeo. That brings to mind the English words “energy” and “energetic.” This is not a lethargic faith that simply assents to a belief, but one that works because of that belief.

Paul says we are to be “striving for the faith” in Phil 1:27. That word is sunathleo. Don’t you see the word “athlete” there? We are supposed to be working at it the way an athlete works out—hard enough to raise a sweat.

“Fight the good fight of faith,” Paul says in 1 Tim 6:12. “Fight” is agon and if you don’t see the word “agony” there, you simply won’t see anything. Then there is this, which I have gleaned from years of crossword puzzles—an agon was the fight between two gladiators in the coliseum, a public fight, usually to the death. Are you publicly fighting for your faith, and fighting so hard that you often find yourself in agony from the sheer effort you are putting forth, understanding that it could very well mean spiritual life or death?

We found several other passages as well, all of them strong active words. None of them had anything to do with mental assent, with saying, “I believe,” and thinking that would do. Even such simple things as “Ask in faith,” took on a new meaning when we discovered that the word is often translated “beg” or “plead.” This is not a casual request.

No one should ever need to ask if you are a believer. It should be evident every minute of your life. They should see it in your service to others (Phil 2:17), in your morality (Phil 1:27), in your love (Eph 6:23), in your confidence (Heb 10:22). Believers do work and they work hard. Lazy people need not apply.

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.Ephesians 2:8-10

Some responsibilities are tougher than others. Some responsibilities deserve the word “onus,” a responsibility that is so big it is almost terrifying. I imagine the first time you really understood that word was when they put that tiny, squirming baby in your arms. Suddenly you understood that it was your responsibility to care for another human being, one who was completely helpless and dependent. It wasn’t like a friend who was having a problem so you spent some time with him and then went home to your own life again. This was a responsibility that completely changed your life—your schedule, your budget, your chores, even your habits. I bet you said, “I have to stop (blank)ing now.” You didn’t want your child to develop those same bad habits you were always fighting and suddenly you had the motivation to deal with them. I bet you sacrificed a lot of things. Suddenly spending an hour to put on makeup wasn’t quite so important. Suddenly you forgot to watch a few ball games on Saturday. Suddenly you didn’t need to eat out quite so often, or see so many movies, or go shopping as much. I bet you suddenly felt a love you never even knew existed before then, something nearly overpowering in its strength. While the word onus means a “burden” of responsibility, I bet you never thought of it that way once. You were happy to do those things for that precious child. I was studying a few weeks ago and came upon something that put another onus on me. Once I really understood what I was reading, I actually shivered a little and felt a peculiar sensation in the pit of my stomach.…That they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive remission of sins and an inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith in me, Acts 26:18. We are “sanctified” by faith. Okay, so we are “set apart,” (yawn). What of it?Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name, Matt 6:9. The Greek word for “sanctified” is the same Greek word translated “hallowed.” We are “sanctified” just like God’s name is “hallowed.” Do you realize the burden that places on us in our behavior? Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ, Paul says in Phil 1:27. Suddenly our lives should have changed. We should have been anxious to rid ourselves of the bad habit of sin. Worldly affairs should have found their correct place on the bottom of our priority list. Sacrificing for a Lord who sacrificed Himself for us should have come naturally, and an overpowering love and gratitude should have overwhelmed us. That’s what should have happened. Did it? Maybe this little reminder will help. God expects you to be as hallowed, as sanctified, as His name is. We always told our boys, “Remember who you are.” All of us need that reminder. As obedient children, do not be conformed to the passions of your former ignorance, but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, since it is written, "You shall be holy, for I am holy." And if you call on him as Fatherwho judges impartially according to each one's deeds, conduct yourselves with fear throughout the time of your exile, knowing that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.1 Peter 1:14-19. Now read all those underlined phrases one after the other. That is the onus that is placed upon you.

God set eternity in man’s heart and in longing for that which is unknowable, the inspired men of the Old Testament revealed glimpses from God of that home. And truth to tell, though we have more figures of speech, it is hard to say that we understand much more than they did (Eccl 3:11).

But as for me I know that my Redeemer lives, And at last he will stand up upon the earth: And after my skin, [even] this [body], is destroyed, Then without my flesh shall I see God; Whom I, even I, shall see, on my side, And mine eyes shall behold, and not as a stranger. My heart is consumed within me. (Job 19:26). The ASV translation, “without my flesh” is justified by “And after my skin, this, is destroyed.” Clearly, after his life was over, Job expected to see God.

Peter quotes Psa 16:10-11 and applies it to the resurrection of the Christ. As with most Messianic passages, it also had a meaning for the time written. Regardless, it expresses absolute faith in an undying soul that comes forth from the grave, from the realm of the dead.

Arise, O Jehovah, Confront him, cast him down: Deliver my soul from the wicked by thy sword; From men by thy hand, O Jehovah, From men of the world, whose portion IS IN [THIS] LIFE,… As for me, I shall behold thy face in righteousness; I shall be satisfied, WHEN I AWAKE, WITH BEHOLDING THY FORM. Men of the world have their portion in this life; The Old Testament righteous lived in hope of a resurrection where they would be with God and see him.

Asaph nearly slipped when he considered the rich for “they have more than heart could wish” and “there are no pangs in their death.” But then he “went into the sanctuary of God and considered their latter end.” (Psa 73:4,7,17). What latter end if there are no pangs in their physical death and there is no eternity? Certainly this psalmist believed in after-life punishment of the wicked. And, he believed in a reward in heaven for the righteous, “Whom have I in heaven [but thee]? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee. My flesh and my heart fail; [But] God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever.” (24-26).

For he shall see it. Wise men die; The fool and the brutish alike perish, And leave their wealth to others. They are appointed as a flock for Sheol; Death shall be their shepherd; And the upright shall have dominion over them in the morning; And their beauty shall be for Sheol to consume, That there be no habitation for it. But God will redeem my soul from the power of Sheol; For he will receive me. (Psa 49:10,14-15). Shall we sing a verse of “In The Morning of Joy?” The righteous will be received, redeemed from the power of death and have dominion. YES THEY KNEW!

Dan 12:2 And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. It is not clear in the context that this concerns the final resurrection. Many think it does.

Before Jesus came revealing more, the Pharisees studied the Old Testament and determined that it taught eternal life, eternal reward and eternal judgment. The Sadducees were worldly and could only come up with silly riddles to mock that belief—sort of like the riddle, “What would happen to a man on the way to baptized and a tree fell on him?” These establish nothing. Jesus himself supported the Pharisees, saying, “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat: all things therefore whatsoever they bid you, [these] do and observe: but do not ye after their works; for they say, and do not.” (Mt 23:1ff).

The rich young ruler asked Jesus, "What must I do to inherit Eternal Life?" If the Old Testament does not teach eternal life as a reward, where did he get his notions about it? When you finish considering that, think about the Lawyer who asked the same question in Lk 10:25. A Lawyer had no interest other than the Torah, the five books of Moses.

There are many more such passages in the Old Testament. Some may be less clear, some may speak of eternal life and again, may not. However, once we have established as clearly as has been done above that they knew these things, it does no violence to truth to understand the doubtful ones as supporting belief in eternal life.

In the resurrection morning,When the trump of God shall sound,We shall rise, we shall riseThen the saints will come rejoicing,And no tears will e'er be foundWe shall rise, we shall rise.

I put the cup of coffee down in front of Keith and he looked at it disdainfully. “What are you? A waitress?”

You see, I hadn’t filled it to the brim. Since, just like a waitress, I had to carry it from the kitchen to the table, to have done so seemed impractical to me. Despite another snide comment about “a half-full cup of coffee,” it was plenty full for carrying, about a half inch from the top.

Everyone knows what happens when you fill something to the brim and then try to carry it—it sloshes out all over the place. In fact, whenever Keith fills his own cup, I wind up wiping coffee rings off the table and counter, and splashes in the floor because he fills it to the top. Filled to the brim is fine when you don’t plan on carrying it anywhere—for most things, anyway.

…And they chose Stephen, a man full of faith…, Acts 6:5.

Stephen is the perfect example of a man filled to the brim with faith. It sloshed out all over everyone who came near him. How can you tell? Just look at Acts 6 and 7.

Because of being full of faith, he was also “full of the Spirit and wisdom,” 6:3. Notice: this was before the apostles laid hands on him, 6:6, so we don’t have that excuse for a lack of wisdom and spirituality. We can have those things too if we are filled to the brim with faith.

Because Stephen was full of faith, no one could “withstand him” when he spoke, 6:10. And how did he speak? He knew the scriptures. From start to finish, he told his listeners the history of Israel, 7:1-50. Could we come even close?

He was unafraid of confrontation, 7:51-53. He never ran from opposition, even when it became clear he was in physical danger. Discretion, according to Stephen, was cowardice, not valor. We are often full of excuses for not speaking, instead of enough faith to speak out.

Stephen was completely confident of his salvation, 7:59. He knew the Lord was waiting to receive him. He didn’t flinch from saying so, and certainly never hemmed and hawed around about “maybe going to Heaven if he was good.” He kept himself so that there was never any question, and his faith was probably no more evident than in that one statement, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Can we make the same statement?

His faith also showed by his forgiving others. Just like the Lord he followed to death as the first Christian martyr, he asked Jesus to “lay not this sin to their charge,” 7:60. The disciples recognized their own need and begged for more faith when Jesus told them they had to forgive over and over and over, (Luke 17:3-5). Here is the proof they were correct—a man “full of faith” forgave his own murderers. Can we even forgive the driver in the next lane?

What are you spilling on people? What completely fills your heart and mind every day? Is it politics? Is it the latest Hollywood gossip? Is it the stock market? Is it complaints about anything and everything? Is it the weaknesses of your brethren, and any slight, imagined or real, they might have done to you?

Whatever we are full of will slosh out all over everyone who comes near us. If we are full of faith, our lives will show it. Don’t be a waitress when you fill your cup.

Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope, in the power of the Holy Spirit. And I myself also am persuaded of you, my brethren, that you yourselves are full of goodness, filled with all knowledge, able also to admonish one another.Romans 15:13-14

What career will you choose? Or will you decide to be a stay-at-home mom and then a servant of the church after your children have grown and left the nest?

Where will you live?

Will you take this promotion?

With which congregation of God's people will you choose to serve?

In what ways will you serve?

By the time they reach my age, most people believe the forks are all behind them. All that remains is the final leg of the journey, one about which we may have very little choice.

They couldn't be more wrong. There remains one huge choice we must make: how will we allow the past circumstances of life to affect us?

I've seen older people become bitter and unsympathetic because of the "raw deal" they believe they were handed. But I've seen others with just as trying ordeals radiate a quiet, compassionate wisdom. One permeates the air with the fetid reek of selfishness while the other offers comfort and encouragement. They may have both suffered great losses and disappointments—of such is life—but only one has "the mind of the spirit," recognizing that this life is not the be-all and end-all, that the first moment of Eternity will make it seem as nothing. And that final fork in the road will be her choice to continue serving God by leading others to the same fork, rather than driving them away with spiteful comments, cynicism, and complaints.

This fork may be your last chance. Even if you chose poorly all along the way, you can use your failures to help others avoid them. One right choice at the end can still make your life useFUL instead of useLESS.

Again, though I say to the wicked, ‘You shall surely die,’ yet if he turns from his sin and does what is just and right, if the wicked restores the pledge, gives back what he has taken by robbery, and walks in the statutes of life, not doing injustice, he shall surely live; he shall not die. None of the sins that he has committed shall be remembered against him. He has done what is just and right; he shall surely live. Ezek 33:14-16

AuthorDene Ward has taught the Bible for more than forty years, spoken at women’s retreats and lectureships, and has written both devotional books and class materials. She lives in Lake Butler, Florida, with her husband Keith.